Talk:Got Questions Ministries
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Soul sleep is rejected by most Protestants, the Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Churches.[1] These are the 3 biggest branches of Christianity. So Got Questions Ministries disagreeing with soul sleep is not notable. I am taking the soul sleep material out of the article. Conservative (talk) 03:51, December 24, 2022 (EST)
- Annihilationism is rejected by most Protestants, rejected by the Catholic Church and I could not find any Eastern Orthodox theologians promoting this doctrine.[2] These are the 3 main branches of Christianity. So Got Questions Ministries disagreeing with annihilationism is not notable. I am taking the annihilationism material out of the article. Conservative (talk) 03:59, December 24, 2022 (EST)
- I am keeping the " "once saved, always saved"/Calvinism and Nephilim material as being "Questionable/false doctrines" because these positions are more difficult to support biblically and are minority positions with Christendom. In addition, they are not positions held by the early church fathers or early church. Conservative (talk) 04:08, December 24, 2022 (EST)
- Sigh, argumentum ad populum does not determine what is biblically correct and what isn't. Numerous times in the Bible, Jesus and other prominent leaders make it so abundantly clear that death is a sleep (Matthew 9:24, "the girl is not dead but sleeping"; John 11:11, "our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep"), and biblical truth is independent of official church teachings. As for annihilationism, see Matthew 10:28. If the soul burns forever (and thus is immortal), how is it ever destroyed? The Bible continuously deems the punishment for sin to be death, and therefore, IMO, it's ironic that most fundamentalist, self-proclaimed "biblical literalists" insist that "death as a sleep doesn't mean real sleep" and "the second death in Hell isn't real death."
- There's already a debate page about soul sleep, which I know you participated in, and I'll try to contribute more arguments in favor of the doctrine. We should also have a debate page about annihilationism; I'll start one later unless you'd like to get it going soon, as I have a few other discussions to contribute to first. —
LT(Exodus 23:2) Saturday, 11:02, December 24, 2022 (EST)
- I am keeping the " "once saved, always saved"/Calvinism and Nephilim material as being "Questionable/false doctrines" because these positions are more difficult to support biblically and are minority positions with Christendom. In addition, they are not positions held by the early church fathers or early church. Conservative (talk) 04:08, December 24, 2022 (EST)